Wakanda rising: Black Panther and commodity production in the Disney universe > Shenid Bhayroo Department of English, St Joseph’s University Philadelphia, Philadelphia, United States of America [email protected] ABSTRACT This article examines the superhero film Black Panther as a cultural commodity produced and distributed within an industrial capitalist system. The film has not only generated millions of dollars for the Disney Company, but has also stoked collective imaginations and energised the agency of audiences with its portrayal of the Afrofuturistic utopia, the kingdom of Wakanda, untouched by the ravages of colonialism and ruled by benevolent leaders endowed with superpowers. The film, is currently ranked first in terms of its lifetime gross revenues in the categories of comic book adaptation and superhero film and is the most successful of the Marvel Cinematic Universe characters’ films so far. Black Panther’s many firsts in the superhero genre reflect its non-financial feats: first to feature an almost entirely Black cast; first top-grossing film with an almost entirely Black cast; and biggest debut for an African American director (Disney 2018a). I demonstrate that while Black Panther showcases the work of African American filmmakers, storytellers and artists, and recognises Afrofuturism narratives, the film is also a commodity that sustains the system that produced it. Recognising and establishing the connections between commodity, cultural production and economics also offers a chance to identify opportunities for counter-hegemonies and challenges to the systemic erasure of Afro-histories. Keywords: Afrofuturism; Black Panther; commodity; Walt Disney Company; Marvel Comic Universe; political economy. Number 33, 2019 ISSN 2617-3255 page 01 of 20 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/2617-3255/2018/n33a3 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Introduction On 16 February 2018, four months after its record-setting opening weekend in the United States, global box office receipts forBlack Panther reached $1.4 billion. Almost half of these earnings came from international markets – revenues derived from theatre showings outside the United States and Canada. The Walt Disney Company has consistently highlighted the film’s many financial successes: highest grossing superhero movie of all time; second highest four-day holiday weekend box office receipts ($242 million); third biggest release of all time; more than $100 million earned in four weeks in Latin American theatres and theatres in China; number one release of all time in South Africa, with revenues just over $220 million (Disney 2018a). Audience demographics for Black Panther are different from Disney’s other superhero films. In US theatres, about 37% of ticket buyers were African American, compared to the average African- American movie theatre audience of 15% (Huddleston 2018). Disney Chief Executive, Bob Iger, attributed the company’s 2018 first quarter revenues, and increase of 9% from the previous year, to the commercial success of Black Panther (Faughnder 2018). With a production budget of $200 million, and an estimated $150 million spent on publicity, Black Panther has not only made an impact on Disney’s revenues but also established precedents. Black Panther’s notable firsts include: biggest debut by an African American director (and co-writer) Ryan Coogler, and first Disney film with a significant representation of African-American writers, musicians, and artists in its production crew. Another first was the costumes and outfits created by African- American costume designer Ruth E Carter. Worn by the largely African and African- American cast, the costumes were based on inspiration from the designs, fabric and jewelry of South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, the Congo and Niger, reflecting Zulu, Sotho, isiXhosa, Akan, Maasai, Himba, and Tuareg aesthetics (Ford 2018). The costumes were designed as an interpretation of an imagined future – an Afrofuture, unscathed by the ravages of European colonialism – firmly grounded in the history of Africa and its many peoples and cultures. In this essay then, I discuss how the power of creating Black Panther (Coogler 2018) as a commodity, and the wealth acquired from its distribution, along with all its derived commodities, resides almost entirely with the Walt Disney Company, a multinational media and entertainment conglomerate. In discussing Disney’s power and control over the narrative of Afrofuturism, I also identify ways to understand the motion picture Black Panther as an opportunity for identifying counternarratives and resisting this power and control. The essay begins with an outline of the theoretical lens – critical political economy. Next, I provide a timeline of the creation of the Black Panther Number 33, 2019 ISSN 2617-3255 page 02 of 20 o FIGURE N 1 Black Panther infographic by Disney Studios (The Walt Disney Company 2018) ©MARVEL (fair use copyright permission). Number 33, 2019 ISSN 2617-3255 page 03 of 20 character, and I use this history as a vehicle to trace and establish the antecedents of Afrofuturism. To establish the economic hegemony of the producer, I describe how The Walt Disney Company, ultimate owner of Marvel Comics and Marvel Studios, and current owner of the copyright to the Black Panther character, markets the film as one of its many products. Then, using the key tenets of critical political economy, I examine the many ways in which the filmBlack Panther exemplifies the characteristics of a commodity, or a property, for the purpose of generating revenues for its owner. I conclude by offering reflections on how the economic success and popularity of Black Panther offers an opportunity to strengthen the resistance narratives and ideology of Afrofuturism. Afrofuturism The alternative science fiction view of Africa presented in Black Panther represents what author and culture critic Mark Dery described as Afrofuturism in his 1994 essay Black to the Future, a chapter in Flame wars: the discourse of cyberculture, an edited collection of essays that interrogate the discourse of cyberculture and address numerous aspects of the deliberate erasure and relegation of African Americans to the subaltern position in science fiction literature. Dery (1994) distilled and defined Afrofuturism as the merging of African American/Black cosmologies, technologies and histories in literature and artistic expression in order to re-imagine possibilities for Black emancipation. While the narratives of science fiction, and the narratives and history of African Americans, are largely determined by white males, Dery (1994:182) argues that Afrofuturism exists in many places in American culture – in the paintings of Jean-Michel Basquiat, in the John Sayles's filmThe Brother from Another Planet, in Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland, in George Clinton’s, Computer Games, and in many other ‘unlikely places, constellated from far-flung points’. Indeed, as Anderson (2016:232) observes, the historical precedent for Afrofuturism is WEB DuBois’s 1913 seminal work, The Souls of Black Folk, which influenced creative intellectuals from Claudia Jones and Malcolm X to Sun Ra and Octavia E Butler, from Audre Lorde and Cornel West to Samuel R Delaney and Marilyn Thomas – all of whom extended, deepened and sowed ‘the seeds for a Black speculative movement challenging white racist normativity and Black parochialism’. The dominance of this normativity is evident in the glaring absence of African American representation in the narratives of science fiction literature but is not a result of a dearth of African-American writers, creators, or artists. Number 33, 2019 ISSN 2617-3255 page 04 of 20 o FIGURE N 2 Black Panther costumes Marvel Entertainment (moviestillsdb 2018; cf. Coogler 2018) ©MARVEL (fair use copyright permission). To help create what he called ‘a map of one small corner of the largely unexplored psychogeography of Afrofuturism’, Dery (1994:187) interviewed three African-American writers and scholars: Samuel R Delany, a semiotician; Greg Tate, a cultural critic and reporter; and Tricia Rose, a professor of Africana Studies and History. Each scholar addresses, among other issues, matters of economics, race, power, and representation, all foundational ideas to the now substantive body of literature on Afrofuturism. Tate asserts that African Americans have been creators and consumers of science fiction literature in film, music, graffiti, art, and text-based narratives for decades. Rose contends that Hollywood science fiction films, while upholding a patriarchal status quo, open small spaces for counter narratives for women, for example, Sarah Connor’s character in The Terminator, or Sigourney Weaver’s character in the Alien trilogy. Delaney alerts us to the celebration of consumer society which glosses over the fundamental problem that ‘the redistribution of commodities is somehow congruent with the redistribution of wealth - which it is not’ (in Dery 1994:187). Delaney argues that ‘access to the formation’ of those commodities and the commodity system’ does not equate to how commodities are formed and organised (in Dery 1994:193; emphasis in the original). Users, or viewers in the case of film, have access to these digital Number 33, 2019 ISSN 2617-3255 page 05 of 20 commodities as consumers but lack the power to produce commodity, nor can they derive any wealth gained from the distribution of the commodity. These narratives of science fiction, and of Afrofuturism, are thus not just property, but as in the case of
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